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  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast

    Episode 134

    Justine Barwick

    "If you can't solve the big problems, solve the little ones in front of you and keep chipping away"

    Justine Barwick has been working tirelessly and selflessly in the Community Services sector for 25 years. The sort of person that puts the needs of everyone else before her own. But circumstances eventually changed that dramatically.

    It was what happened in September 2018 that propelled Justine into the national conscience. You see, she was on annual holiday in the beautiful Whitsunday Islands and this country’s collective worst nightmare happened. She was attacked and mauled by a shark.

    She was very, very lucky to survive. In those situations, life changes dramatically in an instant and those changes, should you survive...are ongoing both physically and mentally.

    Here’s the story of an extraordinary woman whose resilience and determination meant she not only survived, she thrived. It's an incredible and inspiring story of survival. And the lessons she's learned on the way are relevant for all of us.

    Head to the link in my bio to hear Justine's story.

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast

    Episode 133

    Melinda Schneider

    *This podcast contains content about depression*

    Melinda started in the entertainment industry aged 3 alongside her mother, the legendary yodeller Mary Schneider. She recorded music at 8, had her acting debut in A Country Practice at 13, went on to release 14 albums and win six Golden Guitars from the Country Music Awards of Australia.

    Her songs have been recorded by Australian music royalty such as John Farnham, Olivia Newton-John and Paul Kelly.

    Melinda is an incredible live performer and has enjoyed huge touring success. After recording an album of Doris Day songs in tribute to her hero, Mary encouraged Melinda to write a full theatre show about Doris. She did. The tour which accompanied her #1 hit album ‘Melinda Does Doris’ toured the country extensively and even sold out the Sydney Opera House Concert Hall twice!

    Having had a successful career for 40 years, she continues her innovative progression with the launch of an independent record label and, I understand, a new album early next year. Rock guru Glenn A Baker described her as one of this country’s truly important artists.

    But, as is often the case, the achievements and accolades don’t tell the whole story.

    In 2018, as a result of 30 years of relentless work combined with a perfectionist streak, Melinda was overcome with depression. She has been very public about it and I personally found it a really insightful discussion. Her strength, resilience and determination in dealing with this issue stands, I imagine, with equal pride alongside all her other achievements.

    Head to the link in my bio to listen to Melinda's podcast episode.

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


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  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast

    Episode 132

    Melissa Doyle AM

    Mel Doyle is so much more than 'an accomplished and awarded journalist with more than 30 years experience'. She's actually one of the best-known and trusted voices and faces in Australian media. And after our conversation for this podcast, it's pretty easy to see why.

    Mel is, of course, best known as the former co-host of the number one rated breakfast program Sunrise. But it's the beginnings of these careers that are just as interesting to me. What was the first break? How did that come about? And it came about when a recently graduated 20 year old Mel Doyle kept pestering a producer in Canberra to give her a go at presenting the weather on TV. She created her own opportunity. And that was something she did a lot. And more importantly, grabbed those opportunities when they did present themselves. 'What's the worst that can happen?'

    After 25 very successful years with Channel 7, she was let go. Its happened to most of us, but not in such a public forum. Her response was not only dignified and done with head held high, it was a catalyst for an incredible 'second act'.

    She has written four books, “The Working Mothers Survival Guide” in 2007, her best selling memoir “Alphabet Soup” in 2013, "15 Seconds of Brave" in 2022 and "How to Age Against The Machine" in 2023.

    In the 2016 Australia Day Honours List Mel was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for her "significant service to the community through representational roles with a range of charitable groups, and to the broadcast media."

    She is National Patron for the Make A Wish Foundation and an Ambassador for World Vision, The Alannah and Madeline Foundation, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead and Adopt Change.

    Head to the link in my bio to have a listen to our podcast chat.

    You'll find her books here:
    https://www.amazon.com.au/s?k=melissa+doyle&ref=nb_sb_noss







    Image: Nick Leary

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast


    Episode 131

    SARAH WILSON

    Sarah is best known for being the founder of the global I Quit Sugar movement, a digital wellness program with 13 award-winning books that sell in 52 countries – which saw millions around the world transform their health. In 2022 she sold the business and gave everything to charity.

    She is an experienced journalist and broadcaster. She was previously the editor of Cosmopolitan Australia at age 29; host of MasterChef Australia; was a News Corp journalist and columnist; and has hosted ABC’s Compass, Ten’s The Project and has been a regular panellist and news commentator on Australian, UK and US screens for two decades.

    Her New York Times bestseller First, We Make the Beast Beautiful is described by bestselling author (The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck) Mark Manson as, “The best book on living with anxiety that I’ve ever read”, and was featured as the book of the year on NBC’s Today Show. It’s published in 27 countries. Sarah’s most recent title, This One Wild & Precious Life, won the 2021 US Gold Nautilus Prize.

    She has been ranked in the top 200 most influential authors in the world (two years in a row), and now resides and works most of the year in Paris where she lives and loves a minimalist life.

    And this all reads like a bit of a career dream. But there have been plenty of nightmares along the way. Our discussion on resilience I found fascinating as well as finding out (to Sarah - and probably all of us in reality), what really matters. All these findings of hers are the result of countless hours of research and interviews and one of the many things I took away from this is the importance of nature. The incredibly positive impact it can have if we just 'get out there.'

    Head to the link in my bio to have a listen to Sarah Wilson's episode.

    The book referred to:
    First, We Make the Beast Beautiful
    https://www.amazon.com.au/first-make-beast-beautiful-Anxiety-ebook/dp/B01N12WLAX

    Her other books and links to her Substack can be found on her website:
    www.sarahwilson.com

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast

    Episode 130

    KATHY LETTE

    Kathy Lette is a celebrated and outspoken comic writer who has an imitable take on serious current issues. She is one of the pioneering voices of contemporary feminism.

    She left school at 16 which didn't please her mother who was a school Principal. She wanted to become a published writer. In Australia. In the 70s. As a teenager. And she did!

    She co-wrote her first novel, Puberty Blues, when she was 17. They were the first teenagers in this country to publish a book about teenagers. The sales went ballistic. It became a film and TV series and is still an iconic piece of literature.

    She moved to the UK in the late 80s and went on to write international bestsellers. Twenty of them! Her titles include Girls’ Night Out, Foetal Attraction, Mad Cows, The Boy Who Fell to Earth, and The Revenge Club, which has just been published.

    Stephen Fry called her books ‘Unputdownable’ and Nicole Kidman described her work as ‘Deliciously rude and darkly funny’.

    She is wickedly funny and a great conversationalist. No one is safe. I even found myself on the end of some of her 'tongue-fu' (as she describes it).

    To hear our conversation head to the link in my bio.

    The book is: The Revenge Club
    You can find it at:
    https://www.booktopia.com.au/the-revenge-club-kathy-lette/book/9781035901289.html

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - Podcast

    Episode 129 - Professor Fiona Wood FRACS AO


    Fiona Wood was born in Yorkshire and was told that becoming a surgeon was not something she could do. She’s not the sort of person that hears the word ‘no’.

    She studied medicine in London and was an outlier. And there was another outlier there...a male doctor often seen in handknitted jumpers and Dunlop Volleys (as opposed to the expected blazers and ties). He was, perhaps you’ve guessed, an Australian. They fell in love, got married and immigrated to Perth with their 2 very young children in 1987 (those 2 were soon joined by 4 more).

    Fiona completed training in plastic surgery and subsequently became Head of the Royal Perth Hospital Burns Unit. In fact, she became the first female plastic surgeon in Western Australia.

    It was her work with medical scientist Marie Stoner on tissue engineering and burn treatments that would gain her attention within the medical world, but it was as the face of Australia’s response to the Bali bombings in October 2002 that brought her international attention as she led a team of 19 surgeons and 130 medical staff working around the clock in four operating theatres to save lives.

    And her incredible ongoing medical innovations and dedication contributed to her being recognised as a “National Living Treasure” and in 2005 being named Australian of the Year.

    We had a fabulous conversation. I don’t know what I was expecting, but I don’t think it was quite this.

    Head to the link in my bio to have a listen to the podcast....

    For those wanting to help with a donation or just read more about her incredible work, head to

    www.fionawoodfoundation.org.au

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast

    Episode 128

    SUSAN JOHNSON

    The Australian newspaper has described Susan Johnson as, ‘One of the finest Australian writers.’

    She describes herself as, author, incurable Australian, friend, feminist, ambivalent mother skewered by love and struck by eternal wanderlust.
    Isn't that a terrific description.

    Her books include, From Where I Fell, published in 2021 (shortlisted for the Voss Literary Award) and The Broken Book (longlisted for the Miles Franklin Award in 2005) and, most recently, Aphrodite’s Breath: A Mother and Daughter's Greek Island Adventure which is a memoir about living on Kythera, Greece, with her 85-year-old mother. A really great read.

    She started her career as a journalist and her life trajectory changed in 1985, when she received the first of three New Writers' grants from the Literature Board of the Australia Council which allowed her to write full time. She is now the author of twelve books.

    Join me for a great discussion with Susan Johnson.


    Link to Susan's latest book:
    https://www.booktopia.com.au/aphrodite-s-breath-susan-johnson/book/9781760876562.html

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - The Podcast

    Episode 127


    DR SONIA HENRY

    Sonia Henry is a doctor practicing in rural Australia. I mean, really rural. She’s also a best-selling author, and an advocate, not only for the welfare of overworked doctors but for the improvement of medical services to remote indigenous communities.

    This is a fascinating and inspiring story of how one doctor, almost on a whim, decided to leave the hustle and hassle of the city behind and took herself to one of the most remote parts of Australia to practice as a GP.

    And her experiences there changed her life.

    She has written two largely autobiographical best selling books about her experiences. The joys, the frustrations, the triumphs and tragedies. She outlines the myriad of problems and potential solutions. And here's a novel approach...when faced with the huge gap in healthcare treatment and availability for first nations people, she just asked her indigenous patients what they would need.

    Head to the link in my bio for Sonia's episode.

    Sonia's books are:
    Going Under
    https://www.booktopia.com.au/going-under-sonia-henry/book/9781760878641.html

    Put Your Feet in the Dirt, Girl
    https://www.booktopia.com.au/put-your-feet-in-the-dirt-girl-sonia-henry/book/9781761068072.html

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the Podcast


    Ep. 126 MOYA DODD AO

    Moya Dodd is a lawyer, sports administrator and a former vice-captain of Australia’s women’s football team, the Matildas.

    She played in FIFA’s first ever women’s tournament in 1988. Twenty-five years later, she joined the governing body of FIFA as one of the first women in its 108-year history. It's unsurprising that when she was there she found the place was rife with integrity and gender issues. She was one of only 3 of 27 FIFA Executive Committee members who declined a $25,000 gift watch at the 2014 World Cup. A year later, she found herself in a luxury Zurich hotel as her colleagues were arrested in a dawn raid.

    As the 'FIFAGate' scandals unfolded, Moya led the #womeninFIFA reform movement, becoming ‘the driving force in the recent push for women within FIFA’ (New York Times) and ‘one of the most credible and outspoken voices for change within the organization’ (Vice Sports).

    In 2016 she was named the most influential woman in Australia by the Australian Financial Review, and in 2018 was named by Forbes magazine as the 7th most powerful woman in international sport (outside the US).

    In 2020, Moya was listed in WICC's global "Best XI" for advancing women's soccer.

    She is a much sought after speaker on the international circuit on many topics including issues of equality, integrity, and change.

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the Podcast

    Episode 125

    Dr Maria Pallotta-Chiarolli AM

    It's hard to briefly describe Maria's bio - but it goes a long way explaining it by understanding she is from a Southern Italian poor, migrant, working class background which instilled in her a resistance to systemic injustice.

    She has been an academic, author, activist and ally in the issues and intersections of cultural diversity, gender and sexual diversity, relationship and family diversity for over 30 years.

    ...and it was a really insightful discussion which was based on a lifetime's experience and an academic understanding. But it was never laced with anger or contempt or masked with utter disappointment and there were no accusations of inaction by those that could change things. Rather, it was a discussion to help others understand the effect a lack of diversity and acceptance can have. And how to fix that. By way of example, there is a lot written and said about 'safe environments' - and although I think I know what that means, when I asked her what an 'unsafe environment' looks like...I acquired a much better understanding.

    Maria is regularly called upon to act as a consultant in educational, workplace, youth services, health services and community service settings. Maria is also regularly invited to speak at diverse community, educational, organisational and other functions and conferences, and in various media such as television, radio and newspaper.

    Head to the link in my bio to have a listen to Maria's podcast.

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the Podcast


    Ep. 124

    Catherine Branson AC KC

    In 1984 Catherine Branson made history when a dual appointment saw her became the first woman in Australia to be appointed Crown Solicitor and the first woman to be appointed as permanent head of a government department in South Australia.

    She went to the bar in Adelaide and then took silk in 1992. An appointment as a judge to the Federal Court of Australia followed in 1994. In 2008 she was appointed President of the Australian Human Rights Commission. The following year she was appointed Human Rights Commissioner. A few months ago, it was announced that my guest would serve a 3rd term as Chancellor of the University of Adelaide.

    An extraordinary career and her work with the Human Rights Commission gave her the opportunity and the platform to give a voice to immigrants detained indefinitely and to support the rights of Indigenous Australians.

    Another true pioneer who paved the way for others.

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the Podcast

    Episode 123

    AMBER LAWRENCE

    Amber started her professional career as a Chartered Accountant but she left that to pursue a dream.

    After a very successful debut in the 2005 Tamworth Country Music Festival - coming second in the major singing competition to Jessica Mauboy - Amber took that success and started her country music journey in earnest. She put in a lot of hard work and was constantly touring. It paid off as she became one of Australia’s leading female country singers. But that’s not just my opinion. She’s won 6 Golden Guitars, including Female Artist of the Year at the 2023 Golden Guitar Awards.

    On the way to that success she has toured the world, entertained Australian troops overseas and even went to New York to play a song she wrote to commemorate the 75th Anniversary of the Battle of the Coral Sea - in front of the President of the United States and the Australian PM (and 800 others).

    In July 2022, she released her tenth studio album, Living for the Highlights, which reached number 1 on the ARIA charts and the Australian Country Music charts.

    Head to Amber's website for info on her touring dates and a link to her albums.
    www.amberlawrence.com.au

    Head to the link in my bio to have a listen to our conversation.

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast

    Ep. 122

    Professor Julie Rrap

    Julie has been a central figure in Australian contemporary art for 4 decades. Our conversation covers a lot and I guess that was inevitable given her enormous contribution to art both in Australia and internationally.

    She has worked with photography, painting, sculpture, performance and video in an ongoing project concerned with representations of the body with a particular emphasis on the female body within western art history.

    Julie has been described as one of Australia's leading feminist artists. Since her first exhibition in 1982, she has been consistently committed to the exploration of the role—or absence of roles—of women in the history of art.

    Throughout her career she has exhibited extensively throughout Europe and Australia.

    She completed her PhD in 2010 and is currently Co-Director and Co-Chair of Sydney College of the Arts.





    Image: Simon Schluter

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

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    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Podcast Episode 121

    Distinguished Professor Jenny Graves AC FAA

    Jenny Graves is a leading evolutionary geneticist who was a very early adopter of gene mapping. She uses genome comparisons to explore the origin, function and fate of human sex genes and chromosomes. In other words, exploring what is it that makes us male, and female and she’s also explored the evolution of the so called ‘gay gene’ and the genetics of transgenderism.

    She’s a Distinguished Professor at La Trobe University, is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science and the US National Academy of Science, 2006 L’Oreal-UNESCO Laureate for Women in Science, and she won the 2017 Australian Prime Minister’s Prize for Science (the first woman to win solo). In 2022 she was elevated to our highest honour, Companion of the Order of Australia.

    She knows what she's talking about.

    Join me for a really interesting discussion. Head to the link in my bio to her podcast episode.

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - The podcast


    Episode 120

    Del Kathryn Barton


    Del Kathryn Barton is one of Australia’s most recognisable and collectable artists.

    She’s now widely recognised as one of Australia's leading figurative painters and a 2-time Archibald Prize winner. Only the second woman to do that in the 103 year history of that portrait prize.

    Her first year out of art college she had the extraordinary honour of being hung in the prestigious Sulman Art Prize at the Art Gallery of NSW.

    All of this is a very long way from her isolated and unconventional rural upbringing where her father was attempting to build a house from scratch (as an untrained builder) while the family lived in tents and other temporary shelters.

    She openly talks about her mental health issues which went largely undiagnosed. It was her mother that suggested she take up drawing as a child to overcome these crippling attacks. And that’s where it started.

    It’s a fascinating, open, fun, funny conversation. And she gave me the secret to her success. It’s no secret.... it’s been discussed by most of the women on this podcast series. Hard work. Really hard work. And passion for the work.

    Head to the link in my bio to listen to Del’s episode. Or go to your usual podcast platform and search Really Interesting Women. It’ll be there.

    Image: Eugene Hyland

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - Podcast

    Revisited on 'Throwback Thursday'

    Anna Funder Ep. 105.

    Anna Funder is one of Australia’s most acclaimed and awarded writers and an international success. One of her books is currently being made into a film with a Hollywood household name as its protagonist.

    ...and she dreamed of being a writer since she was a child.

    Anna spent her early childhood in Paris where her father was working. First day at primary school was a little tricky. Didn’t understand what anyone was saying. She subsequently learnt to read and write in 2 languages. And from that moment, words were her obsession.

    She started her working life as a lawyer and gave up what she called “probably the best lawyer job in Australia”, working in the Attorney General’s department on treaty negotiations and international law. But she didn’t feel like it was her ‘real life’.

    She made a life changing decision to move to Berlin and become a writer. The full story can be heard on the podcast including, while promoting her book ‘Stasiland’, going on a public stage in Germany where the first 2 rows were occupied by ex-Stasi, all taking notes!

    That 2003 book Stasiland won, amongst many other things, the Samuel Johnson Prize which is for the best non-fiction writing in the English language (!!). Actor Tom Hanks described it as 'fascinating, entertaining, hilarious, horrifying and very important.'

    Her 2012 novel, All That I Am, won a myriad of awards including the very prestigious Miles Franklin Award.


    In her recently released book, Wifedom, Anna uncovers George Orwell’s ‘forgotten’ wife Eileen O’Shaughnessy, and rewrites her into history. Geraldine Brooks described the book as, 'Simply, a masterpiece'.

    Her books are important because of the truths they reveal. They are beautifully researched and exquisitely told.

    Have a listen to this fascinating conversation. Head to the link in my bio or copy and paste this link into your browser:

    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849?i=1000619409426



    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.


    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast

    Episode 119

    Associate Professor Michelle Telfer
    MBBS (Hons.) FRACP GAICD

    Michelle Telfer, through her work as an expert in adolescent medicine and through her development and expansion of the Royal Children's Hospital Gender Service for 10 years, is one of the best placed professionals in the country to talk about transgender and gender diverse children and adolescents in Australia and their need for improved access to medical and mental health care.


    It's a long way from when her talent as a gymnast was spotted when she was 5 years old. But when you hear her speak, you can feel the determination and resilience that would have been needed to succeed as a gymnast that is still part of her ongoing journey to succeed now in an area that attracts, at times, extremely harsh and often misplaced criticism.

    Michelle Telfers was an elite gymnast who competed in the 1990 Commonwealth Games and 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona. She came back to finish her final year of high school and was successful enough to go on to study medicine and then went on to specialise as a paediatrician, receiving Membership of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians in 2010. She was the Director of the Department of Adolescent Medicine at Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne. She was also the Director of the Royal Children’s Hospital Gender Service and has been instrumental in the development and expansion of the clinical and research programs amidst rising demand for trans-specific health care in children and adolescents. She has recently been appointed Chief of Medicine for the Royal Children’s Hospital.

    It's an important discussion as the commentary we often see or read, is rarely coming from those who practice at the coal face, so to speak.

    To listen to this episode, head to the link in my bio or search 'Really Interesting Women' in your favourite podcast platform. It will be the latest episode.

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast


    Episode 118

    Tana Douglas

    Tana Douglas is acknowledged throughout the global music industry as a pioneer.

    She was the first female 'roadie' (road crew for rock bands). The first woman in a testosterone fuelled world. You talk about challenges. There's one.

    It was a rocky start. She ran away from an abusive childhood and found herself in the early 70’s in Nimbin (the hippie capital of Australia) where a chance meeting with... a tightrope walker of all things, changed her life.

    For example, soon after that, she walked into a downtrodden home in Melbourne to meet with a band who needed a roadie. She was 16 and stood in the living room looking at a bedraggled group of young men who weren't that much older than her. They hadn't even put out an album yet. But there was something about them. Tana reckons there was an energy that they seemed to just exude. It was AC/DC. She lived with them for over a year while they put their first album together.

    That then started a chain of events that led to her touring the world and working with bands such as Status Quo, The Who, Ozzy Ozborne, Iggy Pop, Elton John, INXS, Lenny Kravitz, Pearl Jam, Red Hot Chili Peppers...the list is endless.

    ...and so are the fabulous stories. Imagine throwing down shots with Bon Scott backstage at Wembley before he went out in front of 80,000 people. She did that!

    Have a listen to this podcast - head to the link in my bio.



    The book is
    Loud: A life in rock’n’roll by the world’s first female roadie

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the podcast

    Episode 117

    Louise Herron AM

    Louise Herron became the first woman appointed to lead the World Heritage-listed Sydney Opera House. During that time, she was charged with transforming the Opera House and overseeing a decade of renewal in all aspects including the largest and most transformative series of building works since the Opera House opened in 1973.


    The renewal process included the enormous task of trying to improve the acoustics as part of the concert hall renovation. That herculean task had its first litmus test recently when the world-renowned conductor Simone Young led the Sydney Symphony Orchestra in the first concert after the renewal, stating afterwards... ‘I’ve never known anything like we’re experiencing today’.


    Each CEO of the Opera House seems to be a custodian, a visionary, and an historian. Louise recounts the sliding door moment that may have meant the Opera House, as we know it, may never have been built but for the late arriving Finnish/American architect Eero Saarinen who was part of the design competition judging panel and wasn’t happy with the shortlist presented to him...so he started foraging through the rejected entries (some say they may have already been literally binned) and found Utzon’s sketches (not even plans) – and just said, ‘that’s it’.


    It's a fascinating discussion covering not just the Opera House, but how Louise progressed her career, the drivers, and motivators behind her decisions. The transferable skills she has used in the varied jobs she has had.

    Also...we discussed where to from here for the Arts generally. How can we progress and promote the Arts and remove barriers from accessing, participating, and enjoying such a vital aspect of life.

    Head to the link in my bio for Louise Herron's podcast episode.

    Visit instagram @reallyinterestingwomen for further interviews and posts of interesting women in history.

    Follow the link to leave a review....and tell your friends
    https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/really-interesting-women/id1526764849


  • Really Interesting Women - the Podcast

    Episode 116
    Heather Mitchell AM

    Heather Mitchell is one of this country’s most acclaimed actors.

    In a career lasting over 4 decades (and counting), she has been involved in film, theatre and television projects that we would all be familiar with no matter what era you call your own...the TV miniseries Bodyline, the fantasy teen drama Spellbinder, movies such as Proof, The Great Gatsby, Muriel’s Wedding, Palm Beach and countless theatre productions culminating most recently in the critically acclaimed, RBG: Of Many, One, where Heather, in an extraordinary performance, plays the former US Supreme Court Judge Ruth Bader Ginsberg - one of nearly 30 characters she plays in the show.

    But if you think that working in a fickle industry for 40 plus years means she’s probably had an easy run...nothing could be further from the truth. The strength, determination and resilience required from Heather in the face of, at times, overwhelming odds, would be beyond most of us. It speaks volumes of her that she has faced these challenges and will still light up a room with her smile and genuine (!) demeanour.

    Clairvoyants and burnt toast play a big part in her life too - have a listen to her podcast episode to understand why.

    She’s greatly respected and admired within the industry and, more importantly, much loved .



    Her memoir, Everything and Nothing (Allen & Unwin) is a really good read. A great Christmas gift if you ask me.

    https://www.allenandunwin.com/browse/book/Heather-Mitchell-Everything-and-Nothing-9781761067303/


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